I bought a little Lee Reloader press for less then $20 bucks a few years ago.
Then made a wood base and an aluminum slide-out spent primer catcher drawer.
Works like a charm.
Except it's too small to get my hand holding a larger rifle case in the opening at the same time!
Just clamp it to a bench with a wood clamp for use.
rc
I bought a little Lee Reloader press for less then $20 bucks a few years ago.
Then made a wood base and an aluminum slide-out spent primer catcher drawer.
Works like a charm.
Except it's too small to get my hand holding a larger rifle case in the opening at the same time!
Just clamp it to a bench with a wood clamp for use.
rc
If this is what your talking about then it was a typo I'm sure. "no" should have said "O"Absolutely what rc has. No need for a no frame for depriming. My bench has a rockchucker next to the lee c frame. I punch primers in the c frame, resize and bell in the rockchucker, then seat and crimp usually in the rockchucker, but for loads I'm not working for super accuracy (38spl plinkers) they go in the c frame. Easier to load the brass in a c than in an O
Since you already have a good press that $29 Lee C-frame press is probably your perfect solution. IMO you won't do much better unless you build it yourself...Lnl ap. I really like it but I like to deprive before I tumble. And now I am getting into wet tumbling. When depriming nasty range brass the dirt and debris just get into all the crevices. Especially the priming shuttle. So it's a pain to have to take everything apart to get a thorough cleaning in. I reload a lot and just want to be more efficient.
I guess I should throw in that I have only been reloading for about a year and 9mm is the only caliber I reload (for now). My 9mm round count is probably past 6k by now.